Category Archives: Backcountry Skiing

It’s baaaaack!

Powder that is!  Kirkwood was unbelievable yesterday. I’d show you, but the footage I took is somewhere under snow in Eagle Bowl.  So if anyone sees a Go Pro out there, let me know.  The snow was so great that we woke up at the crack of dawn for a little backcountry action.

Domi at the top at 7 AM! So pumped she's coming to Europe with me!

powder turns and "O face"

Domi with the pow slash!

and a little air time!

Sign up for the Tahoe Vertical Challenge here to log your hiked vertical throughout the season. I’m at 58 ski days and 32,800′ of hiking.  Not bad for the snowless cards we’ve been dealt!

 

 

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It Snowed!

It finally snowed in Tahoe and it was pretty much game on at Kirkwood and at some of the local backcountry jaunts. Here is a video from the past 4 days of skiing in real snow!

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The Search for Snow Pays Off!!!

It’s a well-known fact that this winter has started off slow for us skiers in the lower 48.  While it was easier to cope with the lack of snow before Christmas, once the new year hit, I decided it was time to take action and seek out snow.  While some have traveled to Alaska, Canada, Europe, and even Japan, I didn’t quite have that time or budget, so after scouring the weather and finding a willing ski partner, we headed north, first stop Central Oregon.  Busting out of Tahoe on the 1st day of 2012, it was eerily warm, we made quick time up to the Oregon border where we saw our first dusting of snow on one of the higher passes east of Shasta.  We rolled into Bend that evening and met up with a local skier, who was injured, but gave us some beta.  The next morning, we headed up to Mt. Tumalo, a quick backcountry jaunt across from Mt. Bachelor. It was windy, but the skies were mostly clear.  A mellow skin amongst the trees led us to the summit where we could witness the wind piling the snow into the northeast facing bowl.  “GAME ON” we thought as we transitioned, did a quick snow assessment, and dropped in.  The first powder turns of the season – so effortless and fun.  We skinned back up for 5 more laps, upping the ante each time and connecting with a local professional skier and photographer.  Small cliffs, then doubles, then a 30 footer, and finally a few flips off a natural kicker; we finished the day with high fives, snow on our goggles, and some new friends (all photos by Court Brock).

a windy skin

small hits to warm up

oh yeah, that’s the stuff!

big hits with deep landings

stoke rubbing off! time to throw some backies!

And a photo montage by the talented Paul Clark:

We headed back to Bend to refuel and plan our next destination and ended up at Deschutes Brewery where the atmosphere was buzzing from a combination of locals night (1/2 off!), the Ducks playing in the Rose Bowl, and the fact that it was the last night open for a few months and they were planning on knocking the wall down that evening to kick off the remodel.  The Bend locals seemed to welcome us and we even found a place to crash for the night and hatched a plan for the next day – Central Oregon was paying off so far, why leave a good thing?

The next morning we headed to the Three Creeks Sno Park to access the Tam McArthur Rim.  We knew it was a long approach on a snow-covered road best done by snowmobile.  We also knew there were yurts back there, but they were booked last time we checked.  So the plan was to head up there, skin out to the base of the Rim, waving down a snowmobile for a tow if possible, and then ski out the road that evening by headlamp.. until we met Shane, who runs the Three Sisters Backcountry Huts on the road in.  He had a group book both huts, but there were 5 no shows and 1 heading out that day.  He offered us a ride in to the yurts and the chance to stay there for free.  He even went back to our truck and got our sleeping bags and a change of clothes for us while we were out skiing!  We couldn’t believe our luck so far in Oregon.

With our new friends, we headed up to the top of Tam McArthur Rim and checked out a zone called the Playground.  It had great terrain and soft snow.  With a rare windless day in the Cascades, we decided to leave the group and do a more scenic tour of the Sisters Range and headed out to ski Broken Hand and Ball Butte.  It was a slog, but a beautiful one.

heading out to Broken Top (Photo by Court)

chalky snow on Broken Hand

skiing amid a volcano sunset

making the most of the short days and good snow

With no snow to even tour on in Tahoe, it was just what we needed – a full day out in the mountains.  Back at the yurts, we enjoyed a gourmet meal prepared by our new friends.

the beautiful three sisters yurt

The next day we focused on objectives closer to the yurt, hitting a sunny line in the morning and numerous lines in the Playground – skiing and skinning until our legs gave out on any landings we tried.

sunny soft lines on Tam McArthur

last round of soft turns in the Playground

Skiing out the 5.5 mile road was quick and we thanked Shane for a memorable time and headed back to Bend for a quick soak in the Turkish baths before the long drive back to Tahoe.  Both of us were reluctant to leave since there was still great snow out there and Central Oregon had treated us so well, but it was time to get back to Tahoe.  But right before we crossed the border back into California, I had to make one last stop – to buy a lottery ticket in Oregon because that is how lucky skiing powder with friends in beautiful places makes you feel.

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Making Lemonade

I grew up in suburban Detroit. There were no mountains or giant clean lakes out my doorstep, but if anyone asks, we had a lot of fun as kids. This weekend was all about bringing the creativity back to fun times. We kicked off things Friday morning with a dawn patrol skin up a groomer at Heavenly. The crew couldn’t have been more excited to be skinning up a GROOMER at 6:30 AM. When we clicked into our skis and boards at the top, you would’ve thought we were about to ski 1,600 vertical feet of untracked powder. We were hooting and yelling the whole way down. I’ve managed to leave both of my cameras in places that are hundreds of miles away, but luckily Lauren was there to capture the morning.

i love this one she got with the cats coming down the run and me skinning up

crew pumped for a combo of fresh corduroy and untracked manmade in a foggy haze

I didn’t have much time to recover from that ridiculous amount of fun, because later that day, I headed down to the Carson Valley Swim Center with three dudes to huck ourselves off the diving boards. This amazing place has a 1 meter and 3 meter springboard, a lap pool, and 2 awesome water slides.

the epic waterslides coming out the building at CV Swim Center

With coaching from the boys, I was able to dial in a gainer off the high dive. I can’t wait to go back and practice a more laid out version – it is such a fun trick. And I had not been down a long curvy water slide in more than a decade… pure childhood fun flashbacks.

Saturday morning PK and I had the goal of skating on a lake and playing some pond hockey. After scouting a few places, we decided to hit up Caples Lake – the ice looked smooth and thick went for nearly a mile.

pond hockey with a view

pk on thick, clear ice

I put together this short video to try to capture the good times.

After more than an hour of skating, we headed to Kirkwood to ski a few runs and hit up the airbag that they finally set up thanks to US Airbag. I threw a few backflips and didn’t get either of them around, but they felt pretty good and with a bigger jump or a longer run in, I think I would’ve landed them. The amazing thing is how nice of a landing the airbag is – much more forgiving than foam and so much easier to dial your take off on real snow.  I talked to the crew at US Airbag and the plan was to lengthen the run in for tomorrow and so I made the plan to be there at 10 am for the opening.

The next morning I headed back out to Caples for a morning skate before heading over to Kirkwood.  This time Lauren was there for moral support and photos and the run in allowed for much more pop.  I nailed the backflip on my first try!  It was awesome.  After getting 6 tucks in a row, I started to lay them out a bit more.  Here is my final one caught on film.

And a photo for good measure

doing my best rachel burks impression!

I really felt like I finally dialed the ski backflip this weekend and US Airbag will be at Kirkwood until New Years Day, so I’m excited to keep practicing and learn some other new tricks.  The atmosphere is inspiring.

And tomorrow morning we’ll head out for another dawn patrol groomer ski and continue to make lemonade out of lemons or rock n’ roll out of rocks?  Or snow cones out of ice?  Something like that.

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Mike’s Hard Backcountry Skiing

Today is the day I’ve been waiting for… for the past month! Will I be crowned champion of the “Mike’s Hard Sports” Contest?  Will the sponsorship deal I’ve been talking about come through?  Will I be able to update the Sponsors section of this blog?  Will I be $10k richer (or more accurately have $10k less debt)?  So, if you’re reading this, your votes could make or break this scenario.  Go to Facebook and vote!  If you don’t have a page, sign your dog up… he/she will not mind!  Just for today!  DO IT!  Do it for me, do if for your country, do it for yourself!

https://www.facebook.com/mikeshardlemonade?sk=app_179970532057634&app_data=41%2C21

And, I’ll definitely buy you a Mike’s (or something better) the next time I see you.

EDIT: So I don’t actually find out today… but Friday, if I made the finals… and it is looking GOOD!  Top 10 all the way at the end of voting.  So apparently the next step is Friday, the finalists are announced and then the Mike’s people take the next few weeks to judge and choose a winner based on:

“humor (how funny a video is), determination (the level of dedication of the athlete(s)), hustle (the amount of effort exhibited by the athlete(s)), originality, and “mike’s spirit®” (how closely the athlete(s) align with Sponsor’s brand values). ”

I think I have a good shot!  What do you guys think?

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California Multi-Sport Summer Fun

A few years ago, I got a bunch of friends together for a monumental birthday and skied the Hotlum Wintun Route on Mt. Shasta for the first time.  I fell in love with the perfectly pitched silky smooth corn on a route that has been called possibly the best ski descent in N. America.  After skiing, we went swimming in the McCloud River, and with its crystal clear water and numerous waterfalls, it is Shasta’s equally pretty sibling.  When I started kayaking last year, I hoped that I’d be good enough one day to plan a trip where we’d ski Shasta and then kayak the McCloud.  Technically the McCloud doesn’t start at Shasta, it is a spring fed river, but it seems pretty close to a source to sink trip – I mean snow from Shasta must feed those springs somehow… right?

I assembled a crew, picked a date, and as it neared, the weather was looking great and the road to the Brewer Creek Trailhead was nearly melted out.  I just had to get there, which proved to be somewhat more difficult than expected since I was flying back from a visit to the Midwest the Friday before.  After numerous delayed flights, missed connections, some standby and luggage success, picking up my dog and gear from Tahoe, I was on my way to Shasta at 11:30 pm Friday night.  Needless to say, I didn’t make our planned 3 AM start and we started as the sun was rising at 5:30 AM.

Although I was hallucinating from the lack of sleep, at least we were on snow relatively quickly.

Nature’s stairmaster (photo by Greg Mardsen)

We hiked to just under 13,000 feet and thought the snow was softening quickly in the hot sun.  With the late start, we decided to cash in on the corn are we were rewarded with 6,000 feet of skiing (photo by Greg).

Splitboarder Stu (photo by Greg)

Greg

Me (photos by Greg)

Done skiing by 1:30, we met up with our friend Tom who was joining us for the McCloud portion of the trip on Sunday, grabbed a camp site, went for a swim, and then set up camp for the night.  I was grateful to get some rest before our next adventure.

The McCloud is a class 3/4 run that starts out at low flows and then nearly doubles in flow a mile after the put in due to some springs aptly named “Big Springs.”  It is known for crystal clear and cold water, some fun and continuous whitewater sections, and enormous river side castles owned by the Hearst family.  It is really unique and did not dissappoint.  All of the following photos are by Greg since I lost my Go Pro in the river.

Thanks to all my friends for a great weekend – living the Northern California dream and STILL skiing good snow on July 23rd!

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It’s the freakin’ weekend

This was my first weekend in over a month where it wasn’t completely planned out and I didn’t have to leave Tahoe.  It started off with my friend Lauren’s Texas Hoedown themed birthday party.  People dressed the part and there was even a rodeo bike that bucked you when you rode it.

The police broke up the party and we headed elsewhere at 10 pm – we went home since I wanted to get up at 5:30 AM to meet Tim and ski down off Tioga Pass on the border of Yosemite.

We hiked up Mt. Dana with the goal of skiing either Solstice or Dana Couloirs – depending on snow conditions.  The 3,000 vert hike was a little difficult with crunchy snow, but we got to the top of Solstice at the perfect time.

The east-facing couloir was looking perfectly soft and we beat the other people looking to ski it by 5 minutes earning the honors of dropping it first… what luck.  I dropped in first and it was steep and perfect.  The view down to Glacier Canyon and Mono Lake was unreal.

Tim dropped in next.  We were pumped about what we just skied and still had another 1,000+ vertical of perfect Sierra corn.

When we got down to the lakes, it is a little hike to get up to Ellery Bowl, but within a beautiful and strange setting.

At the top of Ellery Bowl, we saw some crazy people hiking without shirts on and sitting under cornices – it was difficult for me to watch, but they managed to reach the top without incident.  We had some lunch and then hooted and hollered down the last 2,500 vertical to our car parked at the Ellery Lake dam.

4,500 vertical of skiing for June 25th… not bad!  It seriously looks like May down there.  Here is a little video:

We returned to our favorite campsite in one of our favorite canyons and went for a swim and played some campground games.  It was summer down at 7,500 feet.

The next morning I made the easy 2 hr drive and headed back up to Tahoe to demo paddleboards with Pat and some friends and then hit up the beach before ending the weekend at a friend’s birthday BBQ.  Summer fun on the weekends!

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Filed under Backcountry Skiing, Random rambling

Sisters on Shasta

My sister Nicole came out to visit last weekend and was interested in backcountry skiing and kayaking.  She lives in Colorado and with their complicated avalanche conditions, she hasn’t ever gone backcountry skiing.  I decided what better mountain to ski on your 1st backcountry trip than Shasta?  So, we drove up there Friday afternoon and set up a little camp at Fowlers Camp near McCloud.

The waterfalls were raging:

We woke up early to start hiking at 4:30 AM.   The best way to access Shasta that weekend was from the Bunny Flat Trailhead at about elevation 6,800′.  The top of Shasta is almost 14,200′.  Nicole killed it on the hike – apparently she’s pretty athletic.  Who knew?

We cranked up the mountain and were at 12,800′ at 9:30 am…. seriously.

We took a little food break and then continued up, but the visibility and winds were pretty bad.  Our plan was to hike via Avalanche Gulch, but ski West Face Gully.  We started traversing over to West Face among a cloud and straight into the wind and I couldn’t see 4 feet in front of me!  Change of plan – we took off our skins and skied back the way we came knowing that it would be safer.  Here  is a photo that shows some of the remarkable visibility:

Luckily, the snow turned to super nice corn right around 13,000 feet and it was fabulous skiing for the next 6,200 vertical.

Me and Nicole skiing:

Shasta skied:

Now that Nicole knows how to backcountry ski, I’ll have to teach her how to hold skis.

Here is a video of the fun times we had:

CAUZILLO PRIDE!

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Crescent Moon

So you heard (or experienced) all about the monster storms of the Sierra this winter bringing upwards of 800″ to some ski resorts.  That coupled with the lack of a true spring has left us an incredible snowpack well into June.  I had missed a lot of the epic June backcountry skiing because I was teaching at the community college, rafting, kayaking and getting educated in Swiftwater Rescue.  Although I had to be down in Berkeley for a bachelorette party on Saturday night, I felt like I need to get a ski in before leaving.  I hadn’t actually skied for almost 4 weeks!  Seeing a photo of a friend in front of the Crescent Moon chute at Roundtop, it was looking all time filled in, so I called up my friend Eoin who is a great skier with mountaineering skills and we were all set to head up there Saturday morning.

The skin out to Roundtop is convoluted, but we probably took the best route I’ve ever taken and we were at the base of the couloir pretty quickly. Here is a photo of Eoin approaching the couloir:

The couloir had definitely slid and was not the smoothest snow.  We wanted to boot up it to assess snow conditions, so we switched over to crampons and ice axes and headed straight up.  The snow was super variable – solid ice mixed with soft snow, mixed with breakable.  Weird!  Hopefully the sun would sort that out by the time we got to the top.  The boot was tough for that reason and it was awesome to have Eoin leading the charge through the sketchy top part.  We found some pretty rotten snow at the very top of the couloir which made us pause a little, but the hanging snowfield to skiers left had perfect smooth corn.  Going into this, I wouldn’t have thought I’d ever ski that snowfield because of the 200′ cliff at the bottom, but it looked to be the safest route now so we dropped in there, made two turns, and then got into the couloir.  I kind of butchered the ski, but I blame it on me being super cautious and the snow not being good… my goal for next year is to make more tele turns!  But it was definitely steep and required jump turns the entire way.  As predicted the most fun part was opening it up at the end and making GS style turns down the apron.

Roundtop skied:

Video of the steepness:

We skied out of there to a car parked at Red Lakes via Elephants back and the snow was pretty sticky.  It is hard to remember that it is June with all of the snow.  Back to the car at 1pm, I headed down to Berkeley to meet up with my friends for a night of 80s attire and bachelorette props in San Francisco.   Here are some photos from that night courtesy of my friend Jme (it’s just easier to spell that way):

The next morning I woke up and went on a 40 mile road bike ride with my friend Tim around the East Bay.  It was such a fun ride with super diverse scenary and I can see why he loves riding road bikes in and around Berkeley.  My friend Lauren flew in from Tahoe and we had some delicious homemade mango salsa and margaritas in Tim’s backyard before heading out to see Florence and the Machine at the Greek Theatre.  Shows there are always amazing and Florence didn’t disappoint.  Always fun times with fun friends in the Bay Area!  And always nice to get down there after a long winter in the Sierra!

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Sierra High Route, Days 5 and 6 – The end!

As we sat down to dinner at the end of Day 4 it became clear that the end was near.  We could even see city lights in the distance.  We discussed the plan for Day 5, because if we wanted to, we could have skied out that day, however, we didn’t want to and as one of the other party’s guides said, “the corn was going off.”  So, we decided to leave our tent set up and backtrack to ski down Deadman’s canyon and then back to our camp.  Here is a shot of me making some soul turns below the shark fin above Deadman’s.

The wide open bowl down to Deadmans.

We skied until lunch and then packed up our tent and gear and continued on up to the Tablelands up the snow ramp in this photo.  The route involved a somewhat tricky downclimb, but set us up to ski most of the way to our next camp above Pear Lake Hut.

The splitboarders skied there splits a really long way from the top of the tablelands, which was a blast – great corn snow and turning back to watch the splitskiers rip it up kept me entertained… as well as more stunning Sierra scenery.

After a nice long, rollicking, ski, we found a camp site on a large rock perched above the Pear Lake Hut.  This is definitely the lowest elevations we’ve been at for 5 days.

James and I got pretty into pimping out the tent to maximize the space.  Here I am directing the work.

Final sunset on the High Route.  The smog makes it pretty.

I don’t have any photos from Day 6, but we basically skied out with very little skinning.  This was the first sign of the amazing high pressure weather we had for the last 5 days changing.  The winds were howling that night.

This was also the hardest day to stay with the splitboarders since skis are much better at holding a contour.  We made it to the car around noon and it was 65 degrees in Wolverton.  We drove through Sequoia National Park and dropped down to Frenso (Fres-YES!) where it was a sweltering 90 degrees!  Woah!  Temperature and culture shock… but the Chipotle burritos and beers were delicious.  We were home to Tahoe that night by 8pm.  Here is a map of days 5 and 6. 

Overall, the trip, the weather, and my trip partners were amazing and I am super grateful.

Total trip stats from the GPS:

5.5 days, 46 total miles,  19,397ft total ascent,  21,023ft total descent

Here is a map of the entire route:

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